Japanese

Japanese (Nihongo, 日本語) belongs to the Japonic language family. It is spoken as a first language by 122 million and as a second language by over 1 million people in Japan. It is also spoken in American Samoa, Argentina, Australia, Belize, Brazil, Canada, Dominican Republic, Germany, Guam, Mexico, Micronesia, Mongolia, New Zealand, Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, Panama, Paraguay, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, and USA.The number of Japanese speakers worldwide is estimated at close to 123 million people (Ethnologue).

There have been numerous attempts to establish a genetic relationship between Japanese and other languages and language families. The most popular theory is that Japanese, like Korean, is a member of the Altaic language family. This suggests that Japanese and Korean are related, although extremely remotely. As far as Ainu, spoken in northern Japan, is concerned, there is no evidence that there is a relationship between Ainu and Japanese. Ainu is considered to be a language isolate.

In addition to Japanese, there are 14 Ryukyuan languages spoken in Okinawa and neighboring Ryukyu islands. These are mutually unintelligible with Japanese and, in most cases, also with each other. Since these languages cannot be understood by Japanese speakers as well as by speakers of other Ryukyuan varieties, some scholars in the past considered them to be separate languages. However, the prevailing view today is that they constitute a variety of Japanese. The data below is based on Ethnologue.

Dialects

Although Japan is a relatively small country, it has a surprisingly large number of dialects differing from each other in pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary. Many of them are mutually unintelligible. They are usually divided into two major groups:

Eastern Japanese

Western Japanese

Two forms of the language are considered standard:

Hyojungo, or Standard Japanese
It is taught in schools and used on television and in official communications. Standard Japanese can also be divided into bungo ‘literary language’ and kogo ‘oral language.’ The two varieties differ in grammar and vocabulary. Bungo was the main written form of Japanese until the late 1940s and is still important today for historians, literary scholars and lawyers. Kogo is mostly used today.

Kyotsugo, or the common language.

Standard Japanese is based on, but is not identical to the Tokyo dialect. It is not uniformly spoken across Japan. Instead, there are different versions of Standard Japanese influenced by local varieties. Many people speak their local dialect in addition to Standard Japanese.

Structure

Japanese has a simple syllabic structure consisting of a Consonant + Vowel.

Vowels
Standard Japanese has five vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that make a difference in word meaning. Vowels can be short or long. Vowel length makes a difference in word meaning, e.g., ojisan ‘uncle’ and ojiisan ‘grandfather.’ Other Japanese dialects may have as few as three and as many as eight vowel phonemes.

/u/ is not rounded, rather, the lips are compressed, leaving a space between them for the air to escape. It is pronounced as a closeback unrounded vowel [ɯ].

The vowels /i/ and /u/ are devoiced in voiceless environments, e.g., kutsu ‘shoe.’

Consonants
Japanese has a very small consonant inventory. The consonant phonemes are listed below. A notable feature of Japanese is that the dental consonants /t/, /d/, /s/, /z/ undergo regular mutations before the front vowels /i/ and /u/.

/z/ is pronounced as [dʒ] before i, as [dz] before u, and as [z] elsewhere

/t/ is pronounced as [tʃ] before i, as [ts] before u, and as [t] elsewhere

/d/ is pronounced as [dʒ] before i, as [dz] before u, and as [d] elsewhere

/r/ sounds like something between an [r] and an [l]. It is produced by lightly placing the tip of the tongue in the back of the upper teeth.

Morae
Most dialects, including Standard Japanese, use morae (defined variously as length, weight, and delay) as the basis of the sound system rather than syllables. The Japanese syllable-final n is moraic, as is the first part of a double (geminated) consonant. For example, the word Nippon ‘Japan” has four morae ni + p + po + n, even though it has only three syllables. The number of characters in the hiragana spelling of the word reflect the number of morae. This moraic structure is imposed on loanwords with the result that the monosyllabic English word strike in Japanese becomes a four-morae word su + to + rai + ku.

Stress
Japanese stress is associated with differences in pitch. In Standard Japanese, the pitch shape is predictable on the basis of the location of pitch fall. The rules for pitch shape differ somewhat from dialect to dialect.

Japanese nouns are not marked for either number or gender. When necessary, number can be expressed by indicating quantity or adding a suffix. in a small number of native Japanese words, plurality can be expressed by reduplication, e.g., yama ‘mountain’, yamayama ‘many mountains.’

There are no articles.

Politeness is marked by o– for native native Japanese, and go– for Sino-Japanese nouns, e.g., plain form for ‘money’ is kane, the respectful form is o-kane, the plain form for ‘rice’ is meshi, the respectful form is go-han.

Grammatical functions of nouns are signalled by postpositions, often referred to as particles, e.g.,

Hiroko

ga

Misako

ni

sono

hon

o

yatta

Hiroko

subject marker

Misako

indirect object marker

that

book

direct object marker

gave

‘Hiroko gave Misako that book.’

PronounsJapanese lacks true pronouns like those in Indo-European languages. Rather, there is a subset of nouns called daimeishi that unlike true pronouns take modifiers and do not constitute a closed class (new daimeishi can be added and old ones can go out of use). Personal daimeishi are seldom used because Japanese sentences do not always require explicit subjects, and because names or titles are often used where pronouns would appear in Indo-European languages such as English.

There are three series of demonstratives:

ko– (proximal) series refers to things closer to the speaker than the hearer, e.g., kore ‘this one.’

a–(distal) series for things distant to both the speaker and the hearer, e.g., are ‘that one over there.’

With do-, demonstratives turn into interrogatives.

Demonstratives can also be used to refer to people.

Verbs
Japanese adds suffixes to stems to represent different verb forms.

There are six stems: imperfective, continuative, terminal, attributive, hypothetical and imperative.

Verbs have two marked tenses: past and nonpast with the difference between present and future not being marked in conjugation.

Voice and aspect are indicated by means of conjugation.

Syntax
The normal word order is Japanese is Subject – Object – Verb. The verb must always be in final position even though permutations of other sentence components are possible. The basic sentence structure of a Japanese sentence is topic-comment. The particle wa is attached to various components of the sentence to topicalize them.

Topic

Comment

Kochira wa

Yamamoto san desu

‘As for this person’
particle wa marks topic kochira ‘person’

‘Yamamoto Mr. is’desu ‘is’

‘This person is Mr. Yamamoto.’

Politeness
One of the most salient characteristics of Japanese grammar is the notion of politeness. There are three main levels of politeness levels in spoken Japanese: the plain form, the simple polite form, and the advanced polite form (honorific and humble). Since most relationships are not equal in Japanese society, one person typically has a higher position than the other. This position is determined by such factors as social position, age, job, etc. The person in the lower position will use the polite form, whereas the person in the higher position will use the plain form. Humble language is used when talking about oneself or one’s group, while the honorific language is used to describe the interlocutor and his/her group. The plain form in Japanese is characterized by the dictionary form of verbs + the da form of the copula. In the simple polite level, verbs end in –masu, and the copula desuis used. The advanced polite level frequently uses special honorific and humble verb forms. The honorific suffix –san ‘Mr., Mrs. or Ms.’ should not be used to talk to an outsider about oneself or someone from one’s own group.

Vocabulary
The basic vocabulary of Japanese is a mixture of native Japanese words and words borrowed from Chinese and other languages. Japanese vocabulary abounds in borrowings from other languages. Japanese borrowed extensively from Chinese when they adopted the Chinese orthography. Linguists have sometimes likened the impact of Chinese writing on Japanese to the effect of the Norman conquest on the English language. Japanese words often have synonyms, one of them from Chinese, the other from Japanese. Words of Chinese origin (Sino-Japanese) are called kanga. They often appear more formal to Japanese speakers, just as Latinate words often sound more formal to English speakers. It is estimated that up to 60% of Japanese vocabulary consists of Sino-Japanese words. Even Japanese numerals have two forms.

Below are a few basic words and phrases in Japanese given in romanization.

Japanese has also borrowed a number of words from Portuguese in the 16th century, e.g., pan ‘bread,’ Iesu ‘Jesus.’ With the reopening of Japan in the 19th century, Japanese borrowed from Dutch, German, French, and most recently from English. Loanwords exist alongside native words, e.g., the word bypass can be rendered into Japanese are mawarimiti (native Japanese), ukairo (Sino-Japanese), or baipasu (English borrowing).

Onomatopoetic wordsOnomatopoetic, or sound symbolic, words are very frequent in Japanese, e.g., wan-wan ‘bow-wow,’ yobo-yobo ‘wobbly,’ doki-doki ‘fast heartbeat.’ Onomapoetic words are often used in conjunction with regular words that have a general meaning, e.g., waa-waa naku ‘weep,’ meso-meso naku ‘sob,’oi-oi naku ‘whimper.’

Writing

The Japanese writing system can be traced back to the 4th century AD, when Chinese writing was introduced to Japan through the medium of Buddhism, as Japan adopted Chinese cultural practices and reorganized its government in accordance with the Chinese administrative structure.

Because the Chinese characters (called kanjiin Japanese) could not represent all the elements of the Japanese language, two syllabaries of approximately 50 syllables each, called hiragana and katakana, were created in the 12th century. Today, Japanese is written with a mixture of kanji, hiragana, and katakana. In addition, rōmaji (Roman script) is also used.

Kanjiare used to write nouns, including proper names, and stems of adjectives and verbs;

Hiragana is used to write inflectional endings for adjectives and verbs, various grammatical particles, words for which there are no kanji, and some high frequency words;

The language difficulty levels are fairly broad, i.e., they include a range of difficult languages, so that it is entirely possible that some may be more difficult for some learners than other languages. It can be quite individual. For instance, Cantonese may not be as difficult for a learner who already knows Mandarin, as for a learner for whom it is the first exposure to a Chinese dialect/variety.

MOrgan
November 12, 2014

Irasshai masu or whatever is inccorect meaning for Japanese. Its itashimine

Kuma
January 24, 2015

In the paragraph of “Morae”, I found something wrong.

The English word “strike” doesn’t become a four morae word in Japanese.
It should be “su + to + ra + i + ku”, five morae. 😛

can you please tell me what language or dialect is spoken in Okinawa island of Kume-Jima? I need to find an interpreter that speaks thatt language in FLorida and don’t know where to start from. Thank you

The answer is not straightforward. It depends who the speaker is. Okinawan (a Northern Ryukyuan language) is spoken in the southern half of the island of Okinawa, as well as in the surrounding islands of Kerama, Kumejima, Tonaki, Aguni, and a number of smaller peripheral islands. The Ryukyuan languages are the indigenous languages of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost part of the Japanese archipelago. Along with the Japanese language, they make up the Japonic language family. They are not mutually intelligible with Japanese. It is not known how many speakers of these languages remain, but there is a language shift towards the use of Standard Japanese and dialects like Okinawan Japanese.